The Deal
Friday, December 4, 
8:36 pm

Michael Imperioli to play Bernie Madoff?

  Share     E-Mail    Discussion (1)     Print Story

imperioli,michael125x100.jpgWe all know that the Bernard Madoff story is ripe for Hollywood's exploitation. Such a reality is evidently not lost on actor Michael Imperioli best known for his role as Christopher Moltisanti from HBO's "The Sopranos," who may be working on a possible biopic about the convicted Ponzi schemer. Buried in a New York Times story about Madoff's sentencing Monday is a reference to Imperioli appearing amid the crowds. When asked why he was there, he reportedly told the Times he was doing research for a new film. With a little makeup, Imperioli certainly could play the role of the 71-year-old con man. - Matthew Wurtzel

See story from The New York Times
See related story about alleged Madoff accomplices from Dealscape

Continue reading below

Also on Dealscape





Comments

From: Commander Craig,

As a potential movie villain, Madoff is no Capone, Tony Montana, or Cody Jarrett. He seems too cold and blase about his crimes to center a film around. So such a film would not them be a vehicle for a DeNiro, Pacino, or Cagney. Maybe Imperioli could pull it off.

Besides, as I understand it, almost none of victims ever even SAW Madoff until his arrest; they only heard about what a genius he was. So a Hollywood film would almost have to center on a fevered investigation and the eventual unraveling of the scheme. You could add to the tension with sedate scenes of Bernie and Ruth.


Post a comment





The Deal Pipeline

Deal Video


Inside The Deal: Allegis Group's Gulian discusses General Motor's next CEO.


More video...

Crisis On Wall Street
Technology
Deals of The Decade

Community

Industry Insight

A new era of M&A in China

Current mergers and acquisitions trends point to an upgrading of the Chinese economy, favoring higher value-added production of goods and services.


Industry Insight

In defense of private equity

Josh Kosman has produced a new book, 'The Buyout of America,' that can only be described as a sensationalist, one-sided diatribe against the PE industry.


Editor's Note

Transactions: Nov. 30, 2009

The subject here is the fragility and frailty of the financial regulator.


footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg footspacer.jpg


©Copyright 2009, The Deal, LLC. All rights reserved. Please send all technical questions, comments or concerns to the Webmaster.